Insights into Jamaica Kincaid: Relationships, Writing, and Autobiography
Explore Jamaica Kincaid's reflections on her mother, experiences growing up in Antigua, and her writing process. Delve into the autobiographical themes in her works, contemplating the blurred lines between fact and fiction in literature.
Download Presentation
Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.
The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Kincaid, Her Mother, Antigua I come from the small island of Antigua and I always wanted to write; I just didn t know it was possible. I ve written a book about my mother, and I don t remember anyone going to Antigua or calling up my mother and verifying her life. There is something about this book that drives people mad with the autobiographical question. Like father like son, like mother like daughter!
Girl: Prose or PoetryHear Kincaid Read First Printing in The New Yorker Collected as first story in At the Bottom of the River The Girl may wind up as title character in second collection, Annie John
Brief Commentary on Jamaica Kincaid When I spoke with Kincaid a number of years ago, she spoke very favorably about her mother, remembering that . Her father was a carpenter and what she remembers most vividly about him was that he always had a carpenter s pencil behind his ear. Her memories of him were also loving. But as she says in the quotation here: Like father, like son; . She has written much about her mother, and many of her thoughts about her mother are contained in An Autobiography of My Mother. When we first read Girl, we likely conclude that the words of the mother to the daughter are likely similar to one s Kincaid s mother perhaps said to her Kincaid as she was growing up. Does the final quotation here suggests that readers have or have not sought to verify the accuracy about things she has written about her or perhaps in a broader sense that readers should or should not try to discover the factual accuracy of what a writer writes whether it is labelled as fact or as fiction.